International

More than 95% of consumers live outside the United States. Selling more U.S.-made goods and services around the world is crucial to American jobs and will help businesses small and large grow. Expanding trade also enhances the competitiveness of U.S. manufacturers while boosting the buying power of American families. The International Affairs Division of the U.S. Chamber of Commerce leads the business community’s efforts to shape global policy.
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Our Work Around the World
- International
Why Major World Leaders Meet with the Chamber Every YearThe U.S. Chamber, unmatched in its advocacy efforts on the international stage, meets with top government officials from around the world to discuss investment, innovation, trade, and economic growth.
By Sean Hackbarth
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Learn about the International Affairs Division
Around the globe, the U.S. Chamber advocates for free enterprise, competitive markets, and rules-based trade and investment as the path to economic opportunity and prosperity for all. We work every day to break down barriers to trade and investment, open new markets for American exports and investments, and make sure there's a level playing field for U.S. companies.
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Related Litigation
Events
- Intellectual Property19th Annual USPTO IP Attaché RoundtableTuesday, December 0908:30 AM EST - 11:00 AM ESTJW Marriott Washington DC, 1331 Pennsylvania Avenue NW, Washington, DC 20004Learn More
- Security and ResilienceDisaster Resilience Forum: Beyond the PayoffWednesday, December 1008:30 AM EST - 10:30 AM ESTCharleston Marriott, Charleston, South CarolinaLearn More
- Security and ResilienceInflation, global growth challenges and the middle marketWednesday, December 1001:00 PM EST - 01:45 PM ESTVirtualLearn More
Latest Content
- The Global Intelligence Desk hosts Margaret Myers, director at the think tank Inter-American Dialogue, for a conversation that will shed light on the implications of China’s growing presence in Latin America.Germany’s weak economy and strict limits on debt financing have failed to generate the revenues required to meet an urgent list of priorities.Business showed up in record numbers at the UN's Convention on Biological Diversity, advancing bold solutions to balance conservation with business realities.Germany’s ruling coalition collapsed this month just as Europe’s largest economy faces growing economic challenges. Energy costs are high, productivity is low, and its population is aging even as a backlash is growing against immigration – which is fragmenting the political landscape into increasingly entrenched camps.The U.S. Chamber's Global Intelligence Desk is delighted to host an episode of The Call with German Marshall Fund former president and Senior Advisor Heather A. Conley, a leading expert on the growing Chinese-Russian collaboration in the Arctic.The melting of the Arctic is an environmental tragedy. It has also become part of a Great Power rivalry.How the U.S. Private Sector Transforms Saudi Arabia Through HealthcareThe annual UN Climate Conference provides the Chamber another opportunity to highlight private-sector leadership.Is China fighting off a Japan-style deflationary spiral? Stephen Roach, an economist affiliated with Yale University and a long-time scholar of both China and Japan, joins The Call to share his analysis, noting the similarities do not mean China is destined to suffer Japan’s fate – unless China’s leadership fails to rise to the challenge with much more action.Some experts note similarities between China today and Japan three decades ago and warn that Beijing risks falling into the same deflationary issues that harmed Japan's economy.































